kalian - meaning and definition. What is kalian
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What (who) is kalian - definition

TYPE OF WATER PIPE
Narghile; Hookha; Narghila; Hooka; Nargele; Huqa; Nargileh; Nargile; Huuka; Ghalyun; Qalyan; Ghelyan; Huqqa; Narguile; Jurâk; Tobamel; Lynyrd scotland; Hookahs; Nargila; Argileh; Argilah; Nargilah; Argilehs; Argeleh; Arghile; Narghilè; Kalian; Shisha smoking; Hukah; हुक़्क़ा; Herbal molasses; Narghileh; Hukka; Huqqah; Hukkah; Shisha pipe; Houka; Hubble-bubble (hookah)
  • ''Smoking the Hookah,'' a painting by [[Rudolf Ernst]]
  • A hookah and a variety of tobacco products are on display in a [[Harvard Square]] store window in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]], United States.
  • Hookah cross-section view
  • An [[Egypt]]ian hookah (shisha).
  • Flower-ornamented hookah in a Palestinian shop
  • Huble Buble sign Kathmandu. 1993
  • [[I'tisam-ud-Din]], a [[Bengali Muslim]] from the 18th century, smoking hukka
  • Mughal emperor [[Jahangir]]'s jade ''hookah'', [[National Museum, New Delhi]], India.
  • Karim Khan of Persia]] seated in his royal court in [[Shiraz]], using a Qaelyan (1755).
  • [[Naser al-Din Shah Qajar]] smoking qalyan
  • Persian woman with hookah (qalyan), 1900, Iran
  • Indian]] man smoking through a hookah, [[Rajasthan, India]].
  • A small hookah
  • Men smoking shisha and playing cards in a Syrian restaurant, [[Little Syria]] (Manhattan), 1910.
  • [[Bedouin]] smoking a hookah, locally called ''nargileh'', in a [[coffeehouse]] in [[Deir ez-Zor]], on the [[Euphrates]], 1920s.
  • A café in [[Istanbul]], 1905
  • Vortex Bowls
  • Woodworkers from [[Damascus]], [[Syria]] creating wood components for hookah production (19th century)

Nargile         
·noun ·Alt. of Nargileh.
hookah         
['h?k?]
¦ noun an oriental tobacco pipe with a long, flexible tube which draws the smoke through water in a bowl.
Origin
C18: from Urdu, from Arab. ?u??a 'casket, jar'.
Nargileh         
·noun An apparatus for smoking tobacco. It has a long flexible tube, and the smoke is drawn through water.

Wikipedia

Hookah

A hookah (Hindustani: حقّہ (Nastaleeq), हुक़्क़ा (Devanagari), IPA: [ˈɦʊqːa]; also see other names), shisha, or waterpipe is a single- or multi-stemmed instrument for heating or vaporizing and then smoking either tobacco, flavored tobacco (often muʽassel), or sometimes cannabis, hashish and opium. The smoke is passed through a water basin—often glass-based—before inhalation.

The major health risks associated with smoking tobacco, cannabis, opium and other drugs through a hookah include exposure to toxic chemicals, carcinogens and heavy metals that are not filtered out by the water, alongside those related to the transmission of infectious diseases and pathogenic bacteria when hookahs are shared. Hookah and waterpipe use is a global public health concern, with high rates of use in the populations of the Middle East and North Africa as well as in young people in the United States, Europe, Central Asia, and South Asia.

The hookah or waterpipe was invented by Abul-Fath Gilani, a Persian physician of Akbar, in the Indian city of Fatehpur Sikri during Mughal India; the hookah spread from the Indian subcontinent to Persia first where the mechanism was modified to its current shape and then to the Near East. Alternatively, it could have originated in the Safavid dynasty of Persia, from where it eventually spread to the Indian subcontinent.

Despite tobacco and drug use being considered a taboo when the hookah was first conceived, its use became increasingly popular among nobility and subsequently widely accepted. Gradually, burned tobacco has been commonly replaced by vaporizing flavored shisha. Still the original hookah is often used in rural South Asia, which continues to use Tumbak (a pure and coarse form of unflavored tobacco leaves) and smoked by burning it directly with charcoal. While this method delivers a much higher content of tobacco and nicotine, it also incurs more adverse health effects compared to vaporized shisha hookahs.

The word hookah is a derivative of "huqqa", a Hindustani word, of Arabic origin (derived from حُقَّة ḥuqqa, "casket, bottle, water pipe"). Outside its native region, hookah smoking has gained popularity throughout the world, especially among younger people.

Examples of use of kalian
1. He left two years later for a spell in the private sector, rejoining the central bank in April 2002. (Additional reporting by Vera Kalian and Gleb Bryanski)
2. Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili accused Russia of an "act of international aggression" but Russian President Vladimir Putin said Georgia was deliberately fanning tensions in the region by flying reconnaissance flights. (Reporting by Vera Kalian, Writing by Guy Faulconbridge, Editing by Jon Boyle)
3. Underinvestment, low pay and sloppy safety standards have been blamed for a series of mining disasters, the most recent of which was a blast at a Siberian coal mine in 2005 in which more than 20 died. (Additional reporting by Vera Kalian)
4. WWF, the world‘s largest conservation organization, said in a statement it hoped "the Black Sea catastrophe will lead Russia to adopt a law guaranteeing proper safety of oil operations at sea and on rivers." (Additional reporting by Vera Kalian, Dmitry Madorsky and Natalya Zinets, writing by Christian Lowe and Dmitry Solovyov; editing by Richard Balmforth)
5. Asked if he was effectively fomenting a revolution, he said: "You are absolutely correct." A mathematician who became a business mogul and one of Russia‘s most powerful men in the 1''0s, Berezovsky fell out with Putin and fled to Britain when a criminal investigation was opened into his business dealings. (Additional reporting by James Kilner and Vera Kalian and Katherine Baldwin in London)